University of Notre Dame senior and peace studies student Brittany Ebeling has been named the 2018 Michel David-Weill Laureate, allowing her to pursue a fully funded two-year master’s degree program at the prestigious Paris Institute of Political Studies, or “Sciences Po.”

Valued at $80,000, the scholarship is awarded each year to one American who exemplifies the core values of Sciences Po alumnus Michel David-Weill, namely, academic excellence, leadership, multiculturalism, tolerance, and high achievement.

Located in Paris, Sciences Po is known as the “Harvard of France” — a highly selective research university with a unique academic model that combines human and social sciences, multidisciplinary study and a professional grounding to educate students to understand and transform society.

Notre Dame is one of 30 institutions that competes for the award. Each institution nominates a single student. A winner is selected from a small group of finalists after interviews with a selection committee in New York City.

An international economics major with a concentration in French and a supplementary major in peace studies, Ebeling will pursue a degree in “Governing the Large Metropolis,” a graduate program within the Urban School at Sciences Po that seeks to produce professionals and citizens capable of tackling the challenges of contemporary society at the urban or regional level, from conflict and inequality to pollution and mobility.

In selecting Ebeling for the award, the selection committee “deemed (her) very focused and specific, with an interesting background and an amazing project at the intersection of peace and urban planning that fits very well with the training she will receive at Sciences Po,” according to Sylvain Quatravaux, international affairs manager for Sciences Po in the U.S.

Sciences Po professor Richard Balme, a member of the selection committee, said of Ebeling, “She was well prepared, strongly motivated and able to reach out to many dimensions with her project. She convincingly argued the relevance of studying the city of Paris’ politics and policies through a global and innovative perspective.”

Ebeling is the first Notre Dame student to win the Michel David-Weill Scholarship. She is the third finalist from the University in as many years.

“Receiving this scholarship is not only an incredible honor, but also tasks me with the fulfillment of those goals which I expressed during my interview: working toward more inclusive local economies, promulgating co-housing and co-living models, and investing in sustainable city structures,” Ebeling said. “Modes of urban life which have reinforced inequality are, I believe, untenable, and I am deeply grateful to be given an opportunity to study and work toward a more equitable alternative."

Post-Sciences Po, Ebeling may pursue a Ph.D., live in the mountains and work on a farm, or start working to build co-living and intentional living communities that support local eating and community economies, she said.

“Whatever I do, I hope to work and write consistently about issues of justice and peace,” she said.

A native of Lakeville, Minnesota, Ebeling’s undergraduate resume includes multiple internships and research grants both here and abroad.

She interned with the International Organization for Migration in Geneva, Switzerland, and Dakar, Senegal; the International Program of the Migration Policy Institute in Washington, D.C.; and Asylum Access, a legal assistance and strategic litigation nonprofit that advocates for the rights of refugees.

On campus, she has worked for the Center for Civil and Human Rights within the Keough School of Global Affairs; the Kellogg Institute, where she serves as a member of the Student Advisory Board; and as a research assistant to Ernesto Verdeja, associate professor of political science and peace studies.

“Sciences Po is the ‘Harvard of France’ and this is an incredibly powerful message for us and for the Department of Economics,” said Julia Douthwaite Viglione, professor of French in the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures. “It means that the elite of Parisian intelligentsia in economics and the social sciences more widely, believe, as do I, that Ms. Ebeling has what it takes to help our world take advantage of new economies to usher in a more just, diverse and environmentally stable future. She gives me hope.”